Windy City Heat | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bobcat Goldthwait |
Written by | Tony Barbieri Don Barris Jimmy Kimmel |
Produced by | Adam Carolla Daniel Kellison Jimmy Kimmel |
Starring | Perry Caravello Tony Barbieri Don Barris |
Distributed by | Comedy Central |
Release date | 2003 |
Running time | 92 minutes |
Language | English |
Windy City Heat is a made-for-TV reality film produced by Comedy Central. It first aired on October 12, 2003.[1]
Background
Perry Caravello is an aspiring celebrity and struggling comedian, actor, "skateboarder and snowboarder" who was "discovered" in 1992 by comedian Don Barris, the warmup comic for Jimmy Kimmel Live and The Man Show, during an open mic night audition at The Comedy Store in Westwood, Los Angeles, California.[2] Barris offered Caravello a chance at stardom and, along with Tony Barbieri playing a perpetually stoned "Walter 'Mole' Molinski," befriended Caravello and has played pranks on him since 1995. Caravello's ongoing commitment to achieving this stardom, with the assistance and participation of Barris and Barbieri, is known as The Perry Project,[2] which is noted with a title card at the beginning of the film.
When performing as a trio, Caravello, Barris, and Mole are collectively known as "The Big 3." In a scene in Windy City Heat, Caravello cites an unnamed source referring to the group as "the Three Stooges of the new millennium". In the 1990s, the Big 3 prominently appeared on Simply Don the Public Access Program, a popular public-access television show in the Los Angeles area created and hosted by Barris. Kimmel later joined the show as an announcer.
Plot
Perry Caravello believes he has been given a chance to star in a movie called Windy City Heat, a crime film about a "sports private eye" named Stone Fury. However, there is no such film, as the entire project is an elaborate prank played on him by Don Barris and Mole with the help of producers Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla and real celebrity cameos including Carson Daly, Dane Cook, Tammy Faye Bakker, and William "The Refrigerator" Perry.
Caravello's participation in the "film" begins with the audition process, where he is introduced to Daly, who is also up for the lead role of Stone Fury (and is dressed exactly like Caravello). After a botched audition, interrupted numerous times by Barris and Mole, he eventually wins the role over Daly (later in the movie, he is shown a wall of stars that have also been considered but crossed off, including Harrison Ford, Brad Pitt, and Robert De Niro). The plot of the movie revolves around a dubious story involving Fury trying to track down the actual refrigerator of William "Refrigerator" Perry and the pants of Ernie Banks (Perry appears as himself, while actor Paul Motley portrays Banks). Caravello appears in most scenes with Barris and Mole, who portray Chicago Outfit gangsters "Big Lou" and "Brock," the antagonists of the film. Windy City Heat is directed by Bobcat Goldthwait, who is the actual director in addition to playing the director of the fake film-within-the-film, wearing jodhpurs and only speaking to people through a bullhorn.
Caravello is followed around by at least fifteen cameras (some of which are hidden) during the filming process. He is told from the beginning that he is being recorded and interviewed for the film's DVD extras. Some of the pranks include repeatedly dumping him into a dumpster filled with manure; making him drink a milkshake made of coffee, Chinese food, raw egg, pizza, and beer during while filming multiple takes of a scene, giving him a case of severe diarrhea; and bringing in a stunt double to film Caravello's sex scene with his leading lady, which Caravello is told involves actual sexual penetration on set. Along the way, Barris and Mole continue to egg him on, performing a balancing act of pushing his buttons and stroking his ego. The stress increasingly infuriates Caravello and frequently leads him to scream in a high-pitched shriek. Barris regularly tells Caravello to "Unleash the Fury!"
Throughout the filmmaking process, Caravello is introduced to several individuals involved with the production, purported to be real people, whose names are identical to historical and cinematic figures. Such individuals include the eccentric English producer of the movie, "John Quincy Adams" (whom Caravello never meets in person and who only calls when Mole leaves the room), casting director "Roman Polanski" (Cook), studio receptionist and soon to be co-star "Susan B. Anthony" (Lisa Arch, credited as Lisa Kushell), Japanese "money man" "Hiroshima Nagasaki" (Toshi Toda), who backs out of financing the production when Mole knocks over a table of junk food, limo driver and aspiring rock musician "Travis Bickle" (Dave Sheridan), set photographer "Ansel Adams" (Toby Huss), production assistant "Frances Farmer" (Laura Silverman), Caravello's personal assistant "Burt Ward" (Eric Marseglia), and merchandising agents "Sacco and Vanzetti" (Scott Hartman and Wayne Wilderson). Notable exceptions to this naming convention include attorney "Sol Stienbergowitz-Greenbaum" (Sal Iacono) and Santiago (Tom Kenny), a wardrobe assistant who mistakes Caravello for Luke Perry, provoking a homophobic outburst that Caravello attributes to a homosexual encounter with a casting agent in 1992. Caravello never questions these coincidences on film aside from expressing doubts as to the identity of a man purporting to be Charlton Heston (Bob Legionaire), who refuses to leave Caravello's assigned trailer. To placate him, he suavely offers the old man a cameo in the film, which he enthusiastically accepts with humorous results.
The film culminates in an intentionally hindered race to the fake film's "one time only screening," during which the Big 3 are delayed by a number of setbacks, finally making it in time to see only a select few scenes of the film. They finally arrive at the theater and discover that Caravello's name is misspelled on the marquee. A running gag in the movie is that whenever Caravello's name appears in print, it is usually misspelled. The film itself (what is actually shown of it) features laughably unrealistic special effects, lines of dialogue ripped from Casablanca, Chinatown and Gone with the Wind, ludicrously named characters such as "Jiggly Wrigley" and even a dinosaur, which is inserted into the film at the insistence of Yurgi (Tom Stern), a Romanian pornographic film producer who takes over as the film's new financier. Immediately following the screening, Caravello is met with an enthusiastic round of applause from the audience and is presented with an oversized and extravagant trophy from the "President of Show Business" (Geoff Pierson).
The film ends with a montage backed by Louis Prima's version of "When You're Smiling".
Aftermath
Unlike typical prank shows, it is not revealed to Caravello at the end of the film that the entire thing was a prank; this is due to the fact that the movie is only one component of The Perry Project,[2] which continues to this day. However, included on the DVD for the film is a video recording of Caravello watching the actual film for the first time in his home, alongside Barris and Barbieri (still in character as Mole, who in turn tells Caravello he has adopted the stage name "Tony Barbieri"). He does not seem to react as if anything is unexpected, and does not acknowledge the fact that the finished product he is watching is not the film he thought he was going to be in.
On Caravello's star commentary track for the DVD, recorded two years after the initial release of the film, he acknowledges that he has since realized that sequences in the film were set up as pranks on him (he says he read about it online), and that he knows Barris and Barbieri were intentionally conniving to infuriate him, yet he continues to speak of the "film" and his acting abilities with the same gusto. Notably, Caravello claims he was playing along during his audition, when Dane Cook introduces himself by the name "Roman Polanski," stating that he had "fucked with everybody" because he did a report on Roman Polanski in elementary school. Despite acknowledging that "Polanski" wasn't really a casting director, he continues to believe that it was a real audition and he legitimately beat out the other actors (including Ford, Pitt, De Niro and Daly) to win the Stone Fury role. He also gets emotional watching the scene at the film's premiere when he receives the trophy from the "President of Show Business," and says that he cries every time he watches it.
Dr. Drew Pinsky claims he was told by a Comedy Central executive that they stopped re-airing the movie over fear of legal issues with the Americans with Disabilities Act, due to the fact that the movie is making fun of someone with brain trauma (Caravello).[3]
When the DVD of the film was released in 2006, the cover is listed as starring "Perry Karavello",[4] continuing the running gag of misspelling Caravello's name.
On June 1, 2007, Caravello filed a lawsuit against Jackass star Johnny Knoxville, alleging that Knoxville, along with Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla, promised him ten million dollars to put his genitals in a mousetrap to show that Perry F. Caravello could prove his "Stone Fury" worthiness live on The Adam Carolla Morning Show on 97.1 FM KLSX as a stunt, and to promote the recently released DVD, and also for payment for his performance in the movie.[5] Caravello dropped this lawsuit on June 10, 2008. In a 2013 appearance on WTF with Marc Maron, Barris revealed that an unnamed attorney representing Caravello received a portion of a relatively small financial settlement, but did not divulge further details.[6]
Sequel
On 11 October 2013 the Big 3 announced plans for a sequel that would be crowd funded.[7] The crowd funding attempt to raise $500k ran for 50 days and raised $16,220, or 3.2% of the target amount. Barris subsequently announced that enough funds were raised to film a reality show television pilot that is being actively marketed around Hollywood. Fans were encouraged to join the production as extras during the "Wedding Weekend," which was filmed for the pilot.
The Big 3 Podcast
In October 2010, Windy City Heat was spun off into a weekly comedy podcast called The Big 3 Podcast. It features the Big 3 in what they describe as a discussion on "pop culture and our own personal lives".[8] Many of the themes and running gags from Windy City Heat return, such as the constant misspelling and mispronunciation of Caravello's name and the inadvertent provocation of Caravello's self-admitted homophobia, which often results in repeated references to Caravello's homosexual encounter with a casting agent in 1992.[9] Supporting characters from Windy City Heat, including "John Quincy Adams", "Yurgi", "Sol Steinbergowitz-Greenbaum" and "Burt Ward," have made a return for the podcast, and the show has featured guest appearances by celebrity fans such as Jimmy Kimmel,[10] Andy Dick,[11] Dominic Monaghan,[12] Jeff Richards,[13] former Penthouse Pet of the Month Linda Johnson[14] and prominent Los Angeles businessman Neil "The Mattress King" Leeds.[15] The show was initially published by ACE Broadcasting Network, but since September 2011 it has been independently published by Don Barris' "Simply Don the Podcast Network".
The Big 3 Live
Debuting at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2013, The Big 3 Live is a monthly live video podcast produced and distributed by Video Podcast Network (VPN), part of the YouTube Original Channel Initiative. It uses many of the elements of The Big 3 Podcast, but also includes video clips of past Big 3 moments, such as segments from Simply Don the Public Access Program and appearances at The Comedy Store. VPN also made it part of their "ANiMASHUPS" series, where they take audio clips from VPN shows and animate them into short cartoons.[16]
See also
References
- ↑ "Windy City Heat". Comedy Central. 26 September 2006. Retrieved 4 May 2018 – via Amazon.
- 1 2 3 "The Greatest Trick Comedy Ever Pulled". Grantland. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
- ↑ #096: Morning Session. The Adam & Dr Drew Show. November 17, 2013.
- ↑ "LinkedIn". LinkedIn. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ BBC News
- ↑ "Don Barris Discusses The Big 3 Project with Marc Maron (August 1, 2013)". WTF with Marc Maron. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
- ↑ "Fundanything.com". Archived from the original on 2013-10-16. Retrieved 2013-10-16.
- ↑ "The Big Three". The Big Three. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ Unprofessional1992 (8 July 2011). "The Big 3 - Gay Bullied (part 2)". Archived from the original on 2021-12-18. Retrieved 4 May 2018 – via YouTube.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ↑ "The Big 3 Podcast Premeire [sic]". Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "Gay Bullied". Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "Contracts". Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "Shrink Rap". Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "Auditions". Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ "The Mattress King". Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ↑ Talk Show Labs (14 March 2013). "Bieber Shrine". Archived from the original on 2021-12-18. Retrieved 4 May 2018 – via YouTube.